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13 June 2015

Did the US Overreact to 9/11?

June 10th, 2015 

Louise Richardson, the incoming vice-chancellor of the University of Oxford, has attracted controversy for suggesting the US overreacted to the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001.


Richardson is a well-respected expert on terrorism studies and made her comments in the context of a nuanced argument about how nations should best respond to terrorism in the contemporary era.

It is however inevitable, given both Richardson’s new status as the head of a prestigious institution and the politically charged nature of anything to do with 9/11, that her views have attracted some angry responses in the US. But is she right?
The emotional response

Much of the hostile media reaction to Richardson’s comments drew on contributions from the relatives of people killed during the terrorist attacks. Clearly, no one would wish to tell bereaved family members of those killed on 9/11 that their grief and anger in response to those events were an overreaction.

But when talking of an overreaction to 9/11, Richardson clearly has in mind the broader collective response of the nation to the events, rather than the personal responses of individuals directly affected.

In this broader sense it seems self-evident that the US did overreact in various ways to 9/11. In the weeks and months following the terrorist attacks of 2001, fear about the country’s newly realised vulnerability combined with an invigorated sense of patriotism throughout the country.

George W Bush’s narrative that the terrorist attacks represented an assault on the country’s most precious values of freedom and democracy resonated with Americans. So too did the stated intention to go to any lengths to bring the perpetrators of these crimes to justice.

In many respects this outpouring of patriotic defiance stemmed from what is best about America – a strong sense of collective identity based on shared values, a commitment to seeing justice done and an optimistic belief that the wrongs of the world can be made right.

But it subsequently manifested in some ugly ways. Patriotism based on an assertion of common values can easily morph into an intolerance of dissent. This clearly materialised in the post-9/11 US. Voices which questioned the dominant narrative were denounced as treacherous.

Protesters hit out at a plan to build an Islamic community centre near ground zero.

A quest for justice combined with a fear of the “other” can also easily result in vengeance being aimed at the wrong targets. The rise of Islamophobia in the US following 9/11 is testament to this. The pervasive sense of fear which a terrorist attack is designed to create also facilitated severe restrictions of the very liberties Americans were so keen to defend in the aftermath of 9/11. The clearest example is the expanded surveillance powers granted to intelligence agencies, including the NSA.

There evidently was a sense, then, in which the US overreacted to the terrorist attacks of 9/11. Americans felt deeply threatened by the attacks and were keen to reassert their common values in response to this threat.
The strategic response

While it may be true that ordinary Americans were guided in their response to the horrors of 9/11 by a combination of fear and patriotism – resulting in an overzealous assertion of American values – the same cannot be said for those in charge of formulating some of the most controversial aspects of the government’s response to the attacks.

So I just sign here and I can do whatever I want? EPA/Joe Marquette

Many of those at the heart of the ruling Bush administration responded to the terrorist attacks on 9/11 less as a catastrophic event that elicited an emotive response and more as an opportunity to achieve pre-existing foreign policy goals. Most prominent among these was the desire to remove of Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq.

This goal was espoused by the neoliberal think tank the Project for the New American Century as far back as 1998 in a now infamous open letter to president Clinton advocating regime change in Iraq. Many of the signatories to this letter included figures who went on to play prominent roles in the subsequent invasion of Iraq in 2003. Among them were Richard Armitage (Deputy Secretary of State), John Bolton (Ambassador to the United Nations) and Paul Wolfowitz (Deputy Secretary of Defence). Another was Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld who, on the very afternoon of 9/11, instructed aides to immediately consider whether it could warrant an attack on Iraq.

These individuals – who were key to determining the US government’s response to 9/11 – did not exactly overreact to the terrorist attacks. Rather, they sought to exploit the climate of fear and patriotism which emerged after 9/11 in order to pursue their goals in a wholly calculated and cold-headed fashion.

Did America overreact to 9/11? The answer seems to depend on which Americans we are talking about.

Thomas Mills is Lecturer, Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion atLancaster University.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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